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mahatmakanejeeves

(56,897 posts)
Tue Sep 3, 2019, 01:54 PM Sep 2019

University of Oregon: New photography exhibit celebrates LGBTQIA rodeo culture

New photography exhibit celebrates LGBTQIA rodeo culture

August 30, 2019 - 5:00am

Saddle up, everyone. It’s rodeo time at the Museum of Natural and Cultural History.

Next month, the museum welcomes visitors to the grand opening of “Blake Little: Photographs from the Gay Rodeo,” a traveling exhibit from ExhibitsUSA and the Mid-America Arts Alliance. Featuring 41 black-and-white images, the exhibit blends classic portraiture, sport photography and authentic rodeo swag to spotlight a time-honored LGBTQIA tradition within the collective heritage of the American West.

The opening celebration is set for Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 7 and 8, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the museum on the UO campus.



Developed at the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art in Indianapolis, Indiana, the exhibit explores the diverse and complex natures of individual and community identity in Western rural culture. Taken between 1988 and 1992 at events from Oklahoma to California, the collected body of images combines the action of riding, roping and chute dogging with intimate views into the lives of rodeo participants, examining themes of competition and community and inviting an expansive redefinition of cowboy and cowgirl identities.

“Gay rodeo dramatically reveals an integral part of Western community,” said Craig Miller, a Utah-based folklorist who will come to campus this fall in connection with the exhibit. “It also celebrates the fusion of seemingly disparate cultures: the courage, humor and expression of urban gay America with the grit of rural cowboy heritage.”

Born and raised in Seattle, Blake Little attended his first gay rodeo in 1988.

“The sport, camaraderie and atmosphere of this first rodeo experience transformed me,” he said. “I was completely drawn to it and I had to be a part of it. I wanted to be a cowboy.”

Over the next several years he became increasingly involved in the gay rodeo community and the International Gay Rodeo Association.

“These photographs represent an amazing, magical time in my life,” he said. “Back then, I questioned if I was a ‘real’ cowboy because in the back of my mind I always felt like an observer, and photography was my first passion. But my unique situation allowed me to document the growing sport of gay rodeo from the inside along with the thrills and personal challenges of fulfilling my cowboy dreams.”



Also included in the exhibit are rodeo posters, belt buckles and other commemorative objects that add to the larger story of American gay rodeo from its beginnings in the 1970s.
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—By Kristin Strommer, Museum of Natural and Cultural History
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